Аннотации:
This study analyzes how state-legal control has fostered higher education in Kazakhstan using the
best legal techniques from the US, UK, Germany, and France. Kazakhstan needs strong legislative
power, economic accountability, institutional independence, and academic freedom to develop its
university system and compete globally. The study aims to establish a state-legal regulating structure
for Kazakhstan's universities using global best practices. The study used panel data from 2000 to
2023 using the ARDL approach to assess the long-term and short-term effects of legislative and
policy issues on higher education quality. The Pedroni residual cointegration test confirms long-run
equilibrium relationships between variables, and robust least squares regression analyzes countryspecific effects. The panel ARDL found that firm legal control, public education spending, research
and development, and student mobility improve higher education quality. However, university
autonomy has varied effects in the long run. Short-term academic independence hurts education
quality, but student mobility is desirable. Results show that public education investment and student
mobility increase higher education in Kazakhstan, but academic freedom diminishes it. US
education quality is improved by strict legislative oversight but lowered by public education funding
and university autonomy. This study developed the LEGAF-EDU (Legal, Governance, Autonomy,
and Funding for Higher Education Development) Framework, a transformative model for
Kazakhstan's regulatory concerns. This strategy combines legislative monitoring with institutional
autonomy to create a stable, flexible government that assures high-quality education and holds the
state accountable. The study advances legislation and policy by proposing an evidence-based higher
education reform for Kazakhstan.